Wednesday January 25, 2006 sports. michigandaily. com sports@michigandaily.com OTe Sudigan Bailu 8 -- - ------- --- Cagers gear up for rival Spartans By Jack Herman Daily Sports Writer The last time No. 11 Michigan State won an NCAA Tournament: 2000. The last time Michigan played in an NCAA Tournament: 1998. And the Spartans have taken 12 of the last 13 games from the Wolverines - the past two by a combined 26 points. On paper, not much of a rivalry. But with a total of 21 players from the state of TONIGHT Michigan involved this Michigan State at year's games, it's in no Michigan danger of extinction. Time:8p.m. "Any time you get aT chance to play against a Crisler Arena rival like this and partici- ESPN-Plus pate in the game is a great feeling," said senior Sher- rod Harrell, a Kalamazoo native whose Wolverines take on the Spartans at 8 p.m. tonight in Crisler Arena. Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said he'll approach this game like any other, although he admits many of his players probably won't. But, he'll be happy to know that at least one of his non-Michiganders is taking a similar mindset into the game. "I will admit it's big for the people of Ann Arbor, the people of East Lansing and the people of the state of Michigan," said Texas native Daniel Horton, who scored a team-high 17 points in the Wolverines' last vic- tory over the Spartans, a 60-58 triumph his freshman year. "I realize that they're one of the better teams in this conference, and they're a team that we have to go through to win the Big Ten Championship. But as far as an intrastate rivalry and all that type of stuff, it's not really important in my mind." Teammate Graham Brown isn't buying Horton's line. "No matter what Daniel says, I think he does have a hatred for them. Don't let him fool you," Brown said. "You know he has something inside, he knows how big of a rivalry it is." Even without bragging rights on the line, Michi- gan has plenty to worry about. The result makes the difference between a 4-2 and a 3-3 Big Ten record, a distinction that is especially important with a game against No. 23 Wisconsin looming on Saturday. The Wolverines - ranked 26th in the coaches' poll and 32nd in the Associated Press poll - lie on the cusp of making the top 25 for the first time since 1998. But Fab Five's legacy still burns bright 6 RYAN WEINER/Daily Junior guard Dion Harris and his fellow Wolverines hope to upset Michigan State tonight at Crisler Arena. Before the football team's last two games (I'm not counting Indiana as a game), I thought about which four players in Michigan history I would want. Usually, I ended up with Charles Woodson, Des- mond Howard, Tom Brady and some defensive player. Well, with tonight's huge Michigan State bas-- ketball game coming up, this question resurfaces - but with a twist. Which five Michigan basketball players would I want? But M that was too easy. It has to VEN be the Fab Five, a group The of guys whose games and accomplishments now never offi- cially "happened." I know the athletic department doesn't like these guys, and I'm sure that a lot of students don't either, but let us not forget what the Fab Five provided - other than miss- ing banners. They made Ann Arbor a place people wanted to come to more than ever. C-Webb, Jalen, Juwan, Jimmy and Ray converted countless Michigan fans, including me, just by playing basketball. I can still remember dragging my dad to Foot Locker to buy me what I thought to be the most necessary hoops accessory in the world - black low-cut Nike socks. What kid didn't have those? You could look at every basketball team in the early '90s, and we were all rocking them. I had two pairs: one with a standard white swoosh and another with "Nike" out- lined in blue. Sure, I was a chubby white kid from suburban Minneapolis, but I thought I was Chris Webber in those. But my friend had me beat. He had the maize Michigan shorts. The yellowest things I had ever seen, but at the time I remember thinking, "Damn, I need a pair of those." And, at one point, I got them. Sort of. I got a pair of blue Michigan shorts that I wore every day. One day at the mall my confidence in them almost came crashing down. My friend - cruising in his shorts - and I browsed Southdale Mall as only 9-year-olds could when an old lady approached us. We were almost as tall as the woman, but that didn't stop her from uttering something that was, at that moment, as blasphemous as burning an American flag, the Bible and a Pearl Jam CD. "Those are the ugliest shorts I have ever seen in my life." Each syllable was like a wrecking ball to the groin - what'd she know? Noth- ing, 'cause she was old. Our basketball idols provided us with the stuff to wear, not a woman who made the Golden Girls A eB look hot. I know that this makes me look like I cared more about the fashion trends that the Fab Five started, but it was the hoops that got everyone hooked - me included. Instead of making basket- ball look like a job, they made it seem fun, like it was on the playground. Jalen trash-talked; we trash talked. He may have been light years ahead of us, but we tried. And the dunks, oh, the TT dunks. Webber made us GONI want to throw them down galls like he did. This was how I used a wrench on my own: I loosened the bolts on my bas- ketball hoop and lowered it so even white boys could get above the rim. As my friends and I perfected alley- oops and swinging from the rim, my dad came outside to yell at us. Michigan paid for the rims our idols hung on, and unless it would buy me a new one, we had to stop. That's the thing about the Fab Five - it influenced a nation. The fact that some of them got paid - whatever, that's not all that surpris- ing. I mean, what are the chances that so many great players would go to the same school all at once? Their flair and arrogance car- ried them when some thought the worst of them. Being called drug dealers, thugs and everything else under the sun didn't matter; they stuck together and accomplished almost everything, sans that elusive national championship. They had what this current Mich- igan squad needs - swagger. After Saturday night's win over Minne- sota, coach Tommy Amaker noted that guard Daniel Horton's swagger was the difference. That's probably the first time I've ever loved some- thing Amaker said. The Wolverines need a swagger, an arrogance that makes them really believe they can dominate teams - and not just doormats like the Gophers. The Fab Five had it from the day they stepped on campus. If the current Wolverines - and most impor- tantly Horton and softie Courtney Sims - bring that, maybe they can reclaim their spot as the state's best team tonight. If that happens, I'll slip on the old black socks and pre- tend I'm Webber again. - Matt used to ballfor Our Lady of Grace school, but unfortunately he was more Tractor Traylor than Webber. He can be reached at mvgoni@umich.edu. 4 getting over the hump certainly won't be easy. For starters, it appears very likely that the Wolver- ines will be without wing Lester Abram, who suffered a severe ankle sprain during last Saturday's win over Minnesota. Although Amaker said Abram is listed as day-to-day, neither his somber tone nor shrug-his- shoulders response seemed to suggest optimism about a return tonight. "Not practicing (Monday) probably leads us to believe it might be a stretch," Amaker said. Abram's injury couldn't come at a worse time. The Spartans sport one of the best backcourts in the nations with guards Maurice Ager and Shannon Brown averag- ing a combined 38 points per game. Point guard Drew Neitzel is no slouch either, adding eight points and five assists per game. In addition, there's another little problem that might plague the Wolverines in the post - the 6-foot-l 1, 270-pound Paul Davis. Given the recent struggles of the Wolverines' inside players, they're likely to have some difficulty stopping the center, who puts up more than 18 points and 10 rebounds per game. During the last two games, Michigan big men Courtney Sims and Graham Brown have totaled just 11 points - and both were held scoreless once. "(Davis) is a great player, so we're just going to have to limit his touches and try to do whatever we can to stop him," Brown said. Michigan knows it needs a complete game from its players, inside and out, if it wants to upset its neighbors tonight. "I think this season, we've been playing like, ... me and Daniel play well together, and then Courtney hasn't played well," guard Dion Harris said. "(When Horton) and Courtney play well, I haven't played well. So,I think it will be very important for us to bring it all together on Wednesday, because I think the Michigan State players really know how to play as unit." M CE HOCKEY lers' Kolarik no longer slumping By Mark Giannotto Daily Sports Writer The sophomore slump is a dreaded happening in sports, and forward Chad Kolarik was threatening to become its latest victim. Through 17 games this season, the Abington, Pa., native had just 11 points (four goals, seven assists). Although the mark was close to his 16-game total of last season (12 points), Kolarik was anticipat- ed to shoulder much more of the scoring burden this year. As a freshman, Kolarik joined last year's senior-laden squad with low expectations. "Last year, he came in with some- thing to prove, and he really worked hard;' Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "This year he came and played like a more experienced player and nothing happened. Was he taking it for granted or was he just not working hard enough, we don't know." Whatever the problem was,it appears the sophomore has fixed it. In a seven- game stretch beginning with the Great Lakes Invitational, Kolarik has been on a scoring tear, tallying four goals and dishing out five assists. In a two-game series against Bowling Green this past weekend, the forward had one goal and three assists. "There was a lot of pressure put on him coming in as a sophomore after a good freshman year last season," senior captain Andrew Ebbett said. "He's a guy who puts a lot of pres- sure on himself. But he's come back from Christmas, break and he's more relaxed and just playing. And that's when he plays his best." At the beginning of the season, the chances were there for Kolarik; he just had some bad luck. He missed point-blank opportunities that were automatic his freshman year. Without the puck finding the net, Kolarik's confidence dipped, and his game suffered accordingly. But once he got the proverbial "monkey off his back" in the GLI, his production soared. "You can just see the difference when (Kolarik) has confidence," Berenson said. "He handles the puck better, and his skat- ing is better. His whole game has come up as his confidence has improved. His confidence has improved because he started scoring." It didn't help Kolarik that his line differed from game to game. In an effort to jump-start his scoring, the Michigan coaching staff tried shift- ing the sophomore from wing to cen- ter. None of the changes got Kolarik going offensively. But recently, the forward has been on a line alongside Ebbett. The two comprise a formidable duo that has consistently created scoring chances. "When you are playing with (Ebbett), it's a lot easier to get points," Kolarik said. "You could be through five guys, and he'll find you." The peculiar thing about Kolarik's resurgence is that it coincides with some of the team's most inconsistent play. Since starting 9-1-1, Michigan has gone a disappointing 5-8. Kolarik has been one of the few steady performers during the rough stretch. "Now Chad is doing his role," Ebbett said. "The coaches have told him what he has to do to play well. I think he's being free out there. He's shooting the puck, and it's going in for him. He's a streaky player, and he's on fire right now." a M WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Former Wolverines return as Wildcats By Ian Robinson Daily Sports Writer The scene has played out thousands of times before. Tempie Brown and Catherine DiGia- cinto run down the Crisler Arena tunnel. Tomorrow, it will happen once again, but something will be different. Instead of wearing jerseys and shorts, the duo will don slightly more formal garb when they take the court. Brown and DiGiacinto used to compete for the Wolverines but have I spent the past two seasons as assistant coaches at Northwestern. Last year, Michigan lost 66-59 in Evanston, so tonight will be the duos' first game back in Ann Arbor with the Wildcats. "I always get goose- bumps walking into Crisler, like I did when I played there," DiGiacinto said. ToMo Northwe Mich Time: Crisler sholm's under-18 team one year later, before returning to the United States to be an assistant coach at Holy Cross. In her six years at Holy Cross, the Crusaders made the NCAA Tournament four times and won five Patriot League regular-season titles. While coaching for Holy Cross, DiGiacinto split two contests against the Wolverines - one of which was in Ann Arbor. Northwestern hired DiGiacinto before the 2004-05 season. She has the responsibility of working with the Wildcats' post players. Brown will be coaching - against Michigan in Crisler RROW Arena for the first time. She competed for stem at Michigan from 1987 to igan 1990 and was the team 7 p.m. captain for her final two Arena seasons. She is one of 18 players in school history to score 1,000 career points in and earned All-Big Ten Honorable Mention hon- ors in 1988. After graduating from Michigan, Brown returned to her hometown of Denver to work for Coors Brew- ing Company and coach a local high school basketball team. She entered the collegiate coaching ranks in 2000 as an assistant coach for Saginaw Valley State. She moved on to Eastern Michigan and Lehigh before accepting the Northwestern job last year. Tonight's matchun is a big game for Said Brown: "It's a mix of emotions - with all those traditions that are still there, and at the same time you are trying to get a victory." Although DiGiacinto says that she will approach tonight's game like any other game on the schedule, Ann Arbor holds a special place in the Troy native's heart. "(My four years at) Michigan were some of the best years of my life," DiGiacinto said. "I am excited go back and ee evervone."